Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. MP Nathan Cullen Opts Out Of Running To Replace Mulcair As NDP Leader

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2016 12:25 PM
    OTTAWA — Veteran British Columbia MP Nathan Cullen says he won't run to succeed Tom Mulcair as the leader of the federal New Democrats, preferring to concentrate on electoral reform and climate change.
     
    Cullen, first elected in 2004 to the sprawling northwestern B.C. riding of Skeena-Bulkley Valley, ran against Mulcair in the party's 2012 leadership race, ultimately coming in third behind runner-up Brian Topp.
     
    He said his decision to forgo another run came after much thought and discussion with family friends and supporters.
     
    Three factors came foremost: "What is best for me and my family, what is best for the people I represent in northwestern British Columbia and what this party that I love so much needs and deserves right now," he said.
     
    Cullen came to the conclusion he has other work to focus on.
     
    "One aspect of this decision today — and it's a good aspect for me — is that it allows me the total commitment to the process ... on helping create and form with Canadians a new electoral system," he said.
     
    He also cited the need to work on climate change.
     
    The party has opted for an extended leadership race to replace Mulcair and expects to choose a new leader sometime in the fall of 2017, with the nomination period set to begin next month.
     
    Mulcair was flatly rejected as the party's long-term leader at a convention in Edmonton last month, when more than half the delegates voted for a leadership race.
     
    In order to run, hopefuls will be required to provide a registration fee of $30,000 while the spending cap has been set at $1.5 million.
     
    The party suffered a sharp rejection in the October election, losing more than half its seats and dropping back to third party status.
     
    Cullen said, though, that will change.
     
    "We will be ready again to form government again in just a few short years," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Halifax Mother Who Lost Daughter To Depression Says More Youth Help Needed

    Carolyn Fox says her experience with her daughter Cayley, who died Jan. 22, has shown her that there aren't enough treatment options and supports for young people in the health system.

    Halifax Mother Who Lost Daughter To Depression Says More Youth Help Needed

    Alberta Reviews Fort McMurray Re-entry Plan As Flames Spread North

    Alberta Reviews Fort McMurray Re-entry Plan As Flames Spread North
    The wildfire has grown to about 3,550 square kilometres.

    Alberta Reviews Fort McMurray Re-entry Plan As Flames Spread North

    Liberals Unveil Plan To Outlaw Transgender Hate Speech, Discrimination

    The legislation would, if passed, make it illegal under the Canadian Human Rights Act to prevent someone from getting a job or to discriminate in the workplace on the basis of the gender they identify with or outwardly express.

    Liberals Unveil Plan To Outlaw Transgender Hate Speech, Discrimination

    'Bad Start To Fire Season Doesn't Necessarily Mean Bad Finish'

    'Bad Start To Fire Season Doesn't Necessarily Mean Bad Finish'
    Intense And Early Start To Wildfires This Year Could Spell A Long And Difficult Season For All Of Canada And Not Just For Alberta

    'Bad Start To Fire Season Doesn't Necessarily Mean Bad Finish'

    Passing Of A Patriarch: Calgary Zoo Gorilla Kakinga Dies At 37

    Passing Of A Patriarch: Calgary Zoo Gorilla Kakinga Dies At 37
    The zoo says Kakinga died on the weekend of heart failure.

    Passing Of A Patriarch: Calgary Zoo Gorilla Kakinga Dies At 37

    Archeologists Find Fresh Evidence Of Long-sought British Fort In Lunenburg

    Archeologists Find Fresh Evidence Of Long-sought British Fort In Lunenburg
    Halifax professor Henry Cary said historic records set off the hunt for a star-shaped or pentagonal fort that was marked on a 1753 plan of Lunenburg.

    Archeologists Find Fresh Evidence Of Long-sought British Fort In Lunenburg